Inductee Alonzo Mourning addresses the media during the Class of 2014 Press Event as part of the 2014 Basketball Hall of Fame Enshrinement Ceremony on August 7, 2014 at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts. (Source: Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images)

MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) — It’s a moment that will resonate with Miami Heat fans well beyond the other lasting images of Alonzo Mourning’s career.

The Heat were closing in on the franchise’s first NBA Championship. After dropping the first two games of the 2006 NBA Finals and falling behind by 13 points in the final minutes of Game 3, the Heat were on the brink of completing an improbable comeback.

Clinging to a lead in the final minutes of Game 6 at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, the Heat were digging their heels in and trying to stave off one final push from the resilient Mavericks.

Jason Terry drove the ball down the court and went towards the basket, his team down by just five points and trying to force a deciding Game 7.

That’s when it happened.

Trailing the pay, Mourning came flying out of nowhere to send Terry’s shot past the photographers lined up on the floor and into the third row of seats. It was the 36-year-old’s fourth block of the game.

He landed on the court and angrily writhed around for a moment, upset that his teammates had relaxed for a moment and allowed the fast break to occur.

That was Mourning. Never afraid to show his emotion and always wearing his heart on his sleeve.

Mourning was unimpressed by his chase-down block of Dallas’ Jason Terry with 8:55 left in the game where the Miami Heat would clinch their first NBA title. Instead, his memorable air-punching, arms-flailing reaction was borne from how Heat teammate Gary Payton had been part of a turnover seconds earlier and then argued with a referee at such a critical moment in the game.

His fire was on full display in that moment.

And it was that fire that led him to the Basketball Hall of Fame

“So I had to sprint back to try to cover his butt for making that mistake, and I was mad,” Mourning said. “Then I got up and I was like, ‘Gary, what are you doing, man?’ Oh, I was mad. Maybe like two people really know why I was acting that way. The thing is, I was cursing Gary out. That’s what happened.”

After a career where he averaged 17.1 points, 8.5 rebounds and 2.8 blocked shots, the 6-foot-10 Mourning will be part of the class enshrined in Springfield, Massachusetts on Friday night, when the surest bet in sports will be that his speech will exceed the 10-minute recommendation he was given for his remarks.

“I think I deserve it,” Mourning said, laughing.

Few would disagree.

He was a seven-time All-Star, is one of only eight players to win the defensive player of the year award at least twice, an Olympic gold medalist and has already had his No. 33 jersey retired by the Heat in a star-studded ceremony that went way longer than planned, slightly raising the ire of an Orlando Magic team that wasn’t planning on a never-ending halftime that night in 2009.

“He had to be the first one to have his jersey retired by this franchise,” Heat President Pat Riley said. “He earned that, many times over.”

But Mourning’s story is more about the journey than any statistic or award.

He was raised by a foster mother who took him and 48 other kids into her home. From there, Mourning became a star at Georgetown, then an NBA icon who couldn’t even be derailed by a kidney disease that necessitated a transplant while still in the prime of his career, and finally a champion with the Heat.

“You don’t think about going to the Hall of Fame. It’s your reward,” Mourning said. “This was the last thing on my mind. I had an amazing career. The journey was spectacular for me, personally. If no one else saw it that way, then so be it.”

Mourning, 44, was presented by John Thompson, his coach at Georgetown, and Riley, his coach with the Heat.

Thompson and Riley are two of the people who Mourning credits most for making him what he is. The other is Fannie Threet, the foster mother who died last year at the age of 98 and the person who Mourning speaks with more reverence for than anyone else.

Thompson, Riley and the woman he still calls “Miss Threet” might seem like three wildly different people, but Mourning sees parallels in them all — mainly discipline, devotion and a balance between toughness and compassion.

Add them up, you get Mourning, who planned to spend his speech thanking just about everyone he can remember.

“It’s the pinnacle of the sport,” Mourning said. “And outside of the birth of my children and winning a championship, it’s the pinnacle of it all.”